New Microchip Breakthrough: New Era in Electronics?
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- Опубліковано 10 чер 2024
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TIMESTAMPS:
00:00 - New Semiconductor
03:51 - Pros and Cons
05:46 - Manufacturing and Doping
07:13 - New Transistor Explained
10:36 - Another Candidate
The paper: arxiv.org/abs/2308.12446
Check out Semiconducting Graphene Research at Georgia Tech:
• Georgia Tech Researche...
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"pretty SiC"... I wasn't expecting the dad jokes but I certainly appreciate them🤣
She also described the silicon doping process as "pretty dope" 😂
I’m sorry your not feeling well 😂
Anastasi does many things Pretty.
Wondering if every wordplay is a dad joke or not? Some wordplays might be so dark that dads should never tell them to their kids.
I'm not that familiar with English culture, there is no "dad joke" in my culture.
@@camelCaseddad jokes are low hanging fruit. mildly funny and child friendly jokes. "I have so many dad jokes I need to keep them in a dadabase.". Or why was 6 afraid of 7? Because 789.... 7 ate 9.
Keep the detailed explanations coming, they're fascinating.
That wasn't detailed at all.
This is more detailed, and honestly, it looks suspiciously similar: ua-cam.com/video/oXBtPmVrES4/v-deo.html
I agree, it was very interesting
I think most of us here have a strong technical bent so no need to hold back on the tech detail - go for it. If nothing else it will spur us on to research further! And we can ask questions which will cause you to create more videos... win/win!! Thanks, Anastasia.
PS: I entered elementary school in 1959, the year that Texas Instruments patented an IC that contained 14 transistors.
I am an SRE in training that plays video games in my off time. I'm lost. The confident pretty person informs me that a utopia is now closer. All that matters imo 🤓
@royvarley, I'm a skateboarder. So I see where you're coming from.
Cant wait to see consumer chips like that in 28 years
I’m not tired of hearing about these potential breakthrough’s or any. I appreciate Anastasi explaining it so thoroughly. Face it, They have been talking about flying cars becoming a reality since the 70’s. Still waiting. Sometimes you just have to be patient. (Update - 1 week since original, reply post) I just read-China now has a autonomous flying taxi, able to carry 2 passengers at a time. It has been certified by the government and is now in service. So, I guess the wait is over.
graphene isnt a flying car.. we're not getting flying cars
Flying cars aren't really practical for many reasons and introduce a whole host of liability problems, which is why we don't have them. Photonics, epigraphene chips, etc on the other hand are entirely practical and propose very few issues. Certainly none on the same level as worrying about a flying car breaking down and turning into a terminal projectile that smashes into your neighborhood and kills a family.
Exactly what they said about self driving car’s. 10 year’s ago.
We do have flying cars. There just isn't the infrastructure for them. They are better suited to rural areas.
This microchips need to be for whole world so the need to build in qantie and it need to work for the people but what if we can make something like bigger more power and if we master that we make it smaller like in 1970 with the 500mb computer that was looding from the plane😂😂🤔🤔
I was expecting ultra-low-quality content-farm material when I clicked this video, due to the click-baity title, unfamiliarity with the channel, and of course how frequently "massive breakthroughs" in tech get hyped. But, I'm only 2 minutes in, and the quality of the information presentation shows I was very wrong. From the other comments, I sense that you (Anastasi) might've expressed uncertainty about audience interest, and level of technical detail. I'll agree with everyone else.. this is perfect, keep going. Thank you for your work.
welcome to the channel 😜 😊
looks like someone else called me a paid sub or a bot, according to my notifications, but looks like they got moderated because the comment isn't here. i see you, @Brian Wind Grøndahl 👀
No dude I have been subscribed to Anastasi for years she makes quality content
As an old semiconductor guy I have to say you smashed it for me - +1 subscriber.
My understanding was that geranium is capable of 50 GHz. So graphene chips should be capable of reaching those clock speeds?
@@MarkHidden at 8:23 Anastasi mentiones THz frequencies
I worked in the very first wafer fab for Motorola in Austin, Texas, back when 1 micron processes were considered 'state of the art'. I'm about to retire from the industry but it's been so interesting to watch the evolution of technology over the last 3 decades.
Did you hang around for the Freescale/NXP acquisition?
I started programming in the mid 70's and retired a few years ago. I went from micro-programming CPUs through many, many languages to be able to accomplish what nobody had even thought of less than a generation prior. Not to mention I had the privilege of working on the Cassini project at Jet Propulsion Lab. I think I was very lucky to participate in during the founding years of information technology. Even though it was a hell of a lot of work.
Did you have to change anything with regards to time dilation?
I love the details. Anyone can do a general overview, but hearing about why it's important from a chip engineers technical perspective is much more interesting.
Yes, details, please. It is easier to skip than to get good information
Great info as always, thanks for the great work.
That was very dope, very sick ;) Love that progress keeps coming and we will have cool new things to look forward to. Love your presentations, thanks for doing the deep dive on new and exciting technology.
Wooow, what an excellent presentation ! You go straight to the point and with clarity. I'm impressed.
Lol there was a time when I was excited by getting a 7 transistor radio...(I am 72)
This is one of my favorite info channels thank u for existing!
I'm glad this is finally coming to fruition. I've been hearing about graphene chips for probably 15 years and wondering when we'd get to see them in action on the user end. Hope this makes it through soon so we can have better/faster systems.
I love the content! Congratulations, you are easier to understand now than when I came across one of your videos previously.
The explanation depth is sic and dope, thank you! You make nerding out more engaging and it is always refreshing to see intelligence and beauty in the same person. How exciting this break through sounds to be able to go right to mass production so quickly. This is the best tech news in a while.
Remember, English is her second language. She might not catch the "sic and dope" meaning. Cheers.
Really nice to have more in-depth physical explanation. The title is really sensational but actually explaining that graphite has been doped to be a semiconductor is quite cool!
Graphene
Borophene
Keep the details flowing! Thank you!
The perfect amount of detail as always. I love the animations, diagrams and specifications.
Your voice modulation & intonation make the knowledge more interesting for the listener.
The odd pronunciation of several words seem to reveal AI creation, why are most word used perfectly but clueless on others?
@@gregorycrose5846 She is not native english speaker. Maybe slavic, maybe russian (as I am), she don't know how sounds "graphene".
А так очень крутое видео 👍
Thanks, interesting topic, correct level of detail.
This is the first of your videos that I've watched. You have yourself a new subscriber!
I always enjoy your videos, Anastasi :).
There's no need to be afraid to go into highly detailed stuff. I'm pretty sure your viewer-base is not typical TikTok viewers but mostly engineers and scientists.
Haha right I mean I'm definitely not a tiktok type of viewer.. 😅😅😅
I love your videos for striking the right balance between technical details and clarity of story. They are always very informative and at the cutting edge of science! Your enthusiasm and love for computer technology really complete the picture.
Conclusion, you can not (yet) be replaced by AI ';)
Exciting times! I always learn a lot from your channel. Thanks for your work!
Absolutely subscribed to you you are my absolute favorite and I trust all of your content. Thank you for your work.
Wonderful how you combine engineering with clarity & your own excitement for what you love. Great that graphite is finding so many uses & as a semi conductor it is only as a new born child, so many exciting developments to come. Thank you for sharing!
It's graphine.
Not graphite.
@@charlespotts3995, and spelled graphene. Not graphine.
Big fan of your videos here😊
Please continue to go into detail🤖🙏🤓
You make such beautiful well planned and informative videos about quite complicated stuff. Helping me and many others to expand the 🧠
🙏😊
Excellent video, thx. The details are appreciated and your clear explanations make it accessible for those with differing knowledge backgrounds. It's great that you are able to get at the 'meat' of these discoveries using your knowledge, as opposed to those youtubers that are just 'reporting the news'. Keep up the great work!
This was great, I think you provided the perfect amount of detail to get across this information. Thank you for covering this.
Introducing foreign atoms (doping) into the graphene lattice can alter its electronic properties. For example, nitrogen or boron doping can create a bandgap in graphene, turning it into a semiconductor.
she tells it into the video.
@@Not-Only-Reaper-Tutorials Joey was reaching for his coffee during that part... lol
@@Not-Only-Reaper-Tutorials its a bot
You did not go too far on the details, in this was an amazing video on transistors, explaining semiconductors is kinda hard but you did it perfectly
Thanks for creating this video, I have been watching your content for some time and I can't believe I wasn't subscribed. Keep up the good work.
Love your videos! you have a knack for clarifying even the most hard to grasp concepts. Not only that, but you are the most beautiful microchip developer I've ever seen!
Thank you!
Good video with many good illustrations really cool…😊
I loved the video. I'm new to all of this but I want to learn as much as possible; so, as long a something is explained well, then the more detailed the better. Thanks for your videos.
The way this popped up in my feed was WILD! I just finished watching "Why It Was Almost Impossible to Make the Blue LED" video and it explained semi-conductors, doping, and growing crystals off of a substrate PERFECTLY (I highly recommend watching that video, it was fascinating!) So when you were explaining the same processes in this video, I feel like I had a cheat code and already knew so so so much about the topic where as before, I would have been lost. This is such cool, exciting new technology! Thanks for the video!
The inventor of blue LED made it possible to get white LED brighter, I recall. Brighter white light LED has really changed society. The inventor of brighter LED should be given the Nobel prize, in my opinion.
@daffyduck4195 well, you are mostly right. And yes, three people that contributed to the blue LED did, in fact, win a Nobel prize!
That is very thrilling to hear about. I suppose these new advances will keep us guessing while the new quantum machines are being developed
excellent video and information! I love this channel. Thank you ANA
Thanks as always for bringing us the latest breakthroughs. Id like to see more videos on physics and electronics in general, as your delivery and content is very cool n informative.
I'm watching this a second time. This is massive:)
The frequency of graphene is off the charts:)
Good to have details, the more the better IMO. I was even hoping for the band gap diagram to make an appearance.
Thank you Anastasi, I appreciate your technical info.
Your level of detail is perfect. Dont change a thing. Great content!
I studied bandgap electronics in the 70s working toward a PhD on heterojunctions. I just stumbled on this channel and your description and supporting media is excellent. subscribed.
Thanks for excellent coverage !
There are several "high performance" semiconductors in use, Gallium, for example. Stacking die and even wafers in 3d too. Both have been used in military applications for decades. Junction temperature has always been a limiting factor and running at high temps with these 'exotic' materials , simply works.
Is it GaAsP?
We definitely need the detail. Thanks Anastasi.
This was a perfect amount of detail. I love your explanations and learning from you.
I love your content, more details Please!!
Wow. I much appreciate the update on this technology. It certainly breaks through barriers. Thanks for explaining it so well. Very exciting!
I have a master in computer architecture but haven’t followed new tech on it for almost 15 years. Thank you for this video. It has relit my curiosity into the field I love so much.
Thanks for your work. :)
This is my 1st exposure to your channel. I like how you cover the content and the little jokes in the dialog :)
Me too. I know nothing of this industry, but she explains it so well I feel so smart lol
Interesting paper, thanks for this amazing informative compilation. Would it be possible to have a comparision of state of the arts Hardware Accelerator (for AI applications) based on IMC in future videos? Also, I would like to see which kinds of devices are used in the MAC array for Digital, ANALOG or Mixed Signal Designs. I understand if it is not an interesting pick, but I had to try anyways. Thanks a lot! Keep up the good work.
Having a modest bakground in chem and physics makes your videos largely understandable. I would like to see more graphic details on electrical aspect of microchips.
I like your channel 😊 It keeps me up to date with the new tech.
Sic video, sic explanations! Keep the videos coming 😊
2:13 time to make memories that small 5:42 porous graphene. So basically she said that Boron Arsenate is used to poke holes in graphene to make faster or slower gate speed of transistors.
I think she said Boron Arsenide.
I think that would be BAs.
I guess they would have to prepare very pure boron and very pure arsenic to make BAs.
Great video. I was one of the original Sound Blaster Card software designers in the early 90s. Go as technical as you want. Any Computer junking from 2010 and back understands this stuff very well.
LOL I still have one or two somewhere.
Awesome bud! To me, You're one of the greats automatically Thanks for the audio and memories!
@afreezaphorogiancossack2194 what version I started with the original and did work on the 8, 16, 32, 64 and some of the onboard stuff for Asus and Dell modifications in 2002
Oh hey, thanks for replying. I've also got a couple of Yamaha PSR-560 keyboards, which I've been told contains most of the architecture of the Sound Blaster. And that is part of the reason I've hung onto them. @@HeritageStacking
@afreezaphorogiancossack2194 the 560 uses a YM3812 chip and that is the same chip used in the original sound blaster. It could produce 9 channels of sound at once plus a frequency range over 49000hz. The chip was developed in the mid 80s and was used in SB products in the early 90s. Creative labs did well with it.
I have been waiting for you to cover this. Finally! 😊
Thank you, that was amazing. I will watch this video several more times and take notes on all the materials mentioned in it. Thumbs up of course.
That's pretty SiC 😂 good one there👍👍👍
Electronics is now a vast field, getting more complex every year. That vastness should allow an economically justifiable niche case for many new technologies. After getting started, improvements and growth should be inevitable.
Well explained. Good balance of graphical illustration and personal presence. The information chunk size was comfortable, and pleasant. Highly specialized information well expressed in a minimum of time. Thank you
Excellent video, thank you for updates
My favourite scientific asmr channel 🙈
I watched the video all the way through. You have a good way of explaining technical subject matter.
Good content ana👏🏽
long time subscriber here, I do believe you're killing it 👍
Hi Anastasia- I used to work in this industry as an S-level hybrid technician so I understand the terminology and transistor theory. Very interesting stuff! I just subscribed and will continue to watch!
I remember the 1980-2000 when we progressed from 8 MHz to 1 GHz. It has been so disappointing that we haven't surpassed 10 GHz in the last 20 years.
I may be wrong but I think at 10ghz the signals exit the chip and become radio through the air, and the chips would have to be cooled by liquid nitrogen to keep from catching fire 🔥
yeah, me too. those good old days, when every Christmas you've got MHz doubled :)
Lol - at some point, the heat from the cpu will be xrays and gamma rays, if you keep upping the cycle speed.
10Ghz should be possible if we used photonic chips instead because they don’t create heat
Why would you want 10 GHz other than bigger number better? Doing the same amount of work at much lower clock speeds is orders of magnitude better.
Very promising for the future! And - as usual - a great video!
I just Subbed - You have Really Cool Info's - "I'm Very Excite!" haha Love that you left that in, don't change it
Both beautiful and smart, how rare. Some guy out there is very lucky.
I did not expect to fall in love tonight. Great video.
This is very good info! I am subscribed!
Great content, earned my sub!
My prediction: we never hear anything more about this. Same as every other big potential breakthrough.
The unfortunate reality
I had the same thought. Usually, something including 'it will be orders of magnitude faster' (which sets the bar at at least 100x) and 'it will continue to grow indefinately', can be dismissed as someones wet dreams.
The problem with today's children they expect instant results without doing any work. Give it some time, silicon transistors took a fair bit of time to shrink to create powerful computers.
When the title ends in a question - answer is NO.
Law of headlines.
Graphene can't seem to leave the labs as well.
Great video. Really enjoyed all the wonderful information on semiconductors. 👍👍👍
I subscribed earlier, but when I did, it was within the first 15 sec.❤
Hey Anastasi! Loved your explanation, but spill the beans... why's your school footage in black and white? Were you hitting the books before technicolor existed? How old are you, really?! 😄😉😜😺🤩
Even if it can be produced on high scales, big chip makers will have to repurpose and invest in their fabs to change the manufacturing process, so it is a looong time away.
I am already your subscriber Ana, since October 2023 'cause you topics on chips & techs are so interesting for me... keep up the good work! ❤☺
As a new watcher, I'm amazed by the amount of detail in the presentation. It seems like someone has done their homework.
Is it just me or are we all tired of hearing about “breakthroughs” in hardware. What use is knowing this when they’re not even going to be commercially available in 5-10 years? 😅
It's news for hardcore tech people working in the industry
IMO this tech will become standard in
@@dchdch8290if the industry’s been working on it for 20 years already, why are you confident it’ll be mainstream in less than 10?
Hopefully it is just you
You, man. Besides, I’ll never get tired of this lady sharing her enthusiasms.
See you in five-to-ten years. And the rest of all us subscribers.🍎(May viability prove out.)
I love you Anastasi ❤
Really good explained- thanks.
Very interesting and fascinating Thank you very much Anastasi
Keep going into the details!
Very exciting! I can't wait for the future.
Wow, this is some really high quality content, thank you!
Thanks, great video. Learned a lot!
Totally fascinating! And just the right level of depth for me.
Very good Anastasia. It’s the right level
I love how you explain about the semiconductor, its easy to understand and interestinf to hear while i had a hard time understanding while listening to my lecturer that speaking used book language....
Great vid! Thank You!
Love your videos!